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UNIVERSITEIT VAN AMSTERDAM Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid Indigenous People’s Rights & Public International Law in Argentina The mobilization of law in the context of the Mapuche people Abstract This paper focuses on the way International and Domestic legal frameworks are mobilized in the context of Mapuche people’s claim to land in Argentina. The specific translation process that takes place between the global and the local, is central to this study. Student: Nuria Vehils Olarra Studentnr: 6263313 Supervisor: dr. B. Oomen Second Reader: dr. Y. Donders Date: 5th October 2011 Word count: 20.007 Nuria Vehils Olarra October, 2011 INDEX INTRODUCTION..................................................................3 1. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK..................................... 11 2. INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK ................. 15 3. DOMESTIC LEGAL FRAMEWORK ..............................29 4. THE MAPUCHE PEOPLE.............................................39 5. CASE LAW.........................................................................46 6. TRANSLATING HUMAN RIGHTS ..............................50 CONCLUSION .....................................................................62 BIBLIOGRAPHY..................................................................65 2 Nuria Vehils Olarra October, 2011 INTRODUCTION “The law is not so much carved in stone as it is written in water, flowing in and out with the tide.”1 The process of mobilizing law, understood as “the process through which a legal system acquires its cases”,2 or in other words: putting the theory into practice, has occupied legal and social scholars for centuries. However, with recent and increasing recognition of indigenous people’s rights challenging the concepts at the heart of human rights theory, a new light from which to look at mobilizing the law has emerged. This paper examines the mobilization of law within and between two spheres: international norms and their domestic implementing legislation, and the local setting in the communities of the Mapuche indigenous people in southern Argentina. Operating within these two spheres are “translators”, as Sally Engle Merry describes them, translating human rights into local language. 3 Their role is crucial to addressing the central question which this paper poses: How are international and domestic legal frameworks mobilized in the case of the Mapuche people in Argentina in the context of their land claims? This research aims at better understanding how law is “brought to life”; how international and local processes interact with respect to indigenous people’s land claims in the Mapuche community; and through what processes universal human rights ideas are adopted and applied locally?4 This last question is central to understanding how international and domestic law can become relevant in the local context, and how it can be adopted and applied locally. In this context, Merry’s theory of translators is very relevant and this paper places special emphasis on the work of different actors in the translation process. Translators are actors who operate in the global and local spheres, providing an interface between 1 J Melvoin, Crime and Punishment (Northern Exposure 1992). 2 DJ Black, ‘The Mobilization of Law.’ (1973) 2 The Journal of Legal Studies 125-128. 3SE Merry, ‘Transnational Human Rights and Local Activism: Mapping the Middle’ (2006) 108 American Anthropologist 40. 4 Ibid. 3 Nuria Vehils Olarra October, 2011 them. They take global concepts, such as international human rights norms, and bring them into local settings. They translate concepts in different cultural settings and as Merry points out: “put(s) global human rights ideas into familiar symbolic terms (…) using stories of local indignities and violations to give life and power to global movements.”5 Definitional challenges While this paper uses the global/local dichotomy, it should be acknowledged that such use does not come without definitional challenges.6 For the purposes of this paper the term ‘global’ will relate to international norms and its domestic implementing legislation, while ‘local’ will refer to the localised settings within communities of Mapuche indigenous people and Mapuche culture7 itself. Studying the mobilization of law in the context of indigenous people’s rights recognition requires first and foremost establishing who the indigenous people are. Under international positive law there is no strict definition.8 However, the one developed by Martinez Cobo, Special Rapporteur of the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination of Minorities, is widely used (both by courts of law and academia): “Indigenous communities, peoples and nations are those which, having a historical continuity with pre-invasion and pre-colonial societies that developed on their territories, consider themselves distinct from other sectors of the societies now prevailing on those territories, or parts of them. They form at present non-dominant sectors of society and are determined to preserve, develop and transmit to future generations their ancestral territories, and their ethnic identity, as the basis of their continued 5 Merry (n3) 40. 6 In relation to gender violence, Merry explains: “Clearly, the different layers, are to a greater or lesser degree, global or local. More or less the degree to which each layer is global corresponds to the degree to which its members see female inheritance in global terms as an international human rights issue. However, the terms ‘global’ and ‘local’ are not particularly useful. Their meaning is ambiguous and they often become a stand-in for social class”. SE Merry, Human rights and gender violence; translating international law into local justice (University of Chicago Press 2006) 212. See also DM Goodale, The practice of human rights: tracking law between the global and the local (Cambridge University press 2007) 11. 7 The working definition of culture for the purposes of this paper, reads as follows: "... an historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols, a system of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms by means of which men communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about and attitudes toward life." C Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures (Basic Books 1973) 89. 8 It has been argued that defining indigenous peoples is neither necessary nor recommendable. ‘Indigenous and Tribal Peoples' rights over their Ancestral Lands and Natural Resources. Norms and Jurisprudence of the Inter American Human Rights System’ (2009) Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, OEA/Ser.L/V/II. Doc 56/09, 23. 4 Nuria Vehils Olarra October, 2011 existence as peoples, in accordance with their own cultural patterns, social institutions and legal system.” 9 (emphasis added). Key elements discerned from such definition are the concepts of “distinct”, “ancestral territories” and “cultural patterns”. This paper will examine these ideas further. Strictly related to the challenge of defining indigenous peoples, is the challenge of defining “tribal people”. Recently the Inter American Court for Human Rights established that tribal people are to be considered indigenous people.10 Another definition deserving attention is the term “lands”. For the purpose of the present thesis, while discussing the rights to land, the latter will refer to Article 13, paragraph 2 of the ILO 169 Convention which determines that “the use of the term lands (…) shall include the concept of territories, which covers the total environment of the areas which the peoples concerned occupy or otherwise use”.11 Last but not least, essential to this debate is the problem of land rights, understood as the recognition of “the existence of indigenous use, occupancy and ownership” and the accordance of “appropriate legal status, juridical capacity and other legal rights in connection with indigenous people’s ownership of land”.12 It is in this scope that land rights will be understood for the purposes of this thesis. Indigenous people’s rights Over the last few decades, globally, there has been an increasing legal recognition of indigenous people’s rights to land. On an international level, indigenous people’s rights to land have been recognized under Article 14 of the ILO convention 169,13 ratified by 9 Sub-Commission on the Prevention of Discrimination of Minorities, ‘Study of the Problem of Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations’ (1986) UN Doc. E/CN.4/sub.2/1986/7/Add 4, para 379. Available at <http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/en/spdaip.html> accessed 7 August 2011. 10 Case of the Saramaka People v. Suriname, IACHR (ser. C) No. 172 (28 November 2007), para 79 – 86. 11 The Inter American Commission for Human Rights has incorporated a “broad concept of indigenous and territories, wherein the latter category includes not only physically occup(ied) spaces but also those used for their cultural or subsistence activities, such as routes of access” ‘Indigenous and Tribal Peoples' rights over their Ancestral Lands and Natural Resources. Norms and Jurisprudence of the Inter American Human Rights System’ (2009) Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, OEA/Ser.L/V/II. Doc 56/09, 23. 12 ‘Indigenous peoples and their relationship to land’ (2000) UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, UN Doc E/CN.4/Sub.2/2000/25, para 33. In depth discussions related to the right to the spiritual relationship with the land escape the possibilities of the present paper. 13 Adopted at the International Labour Office, 76th Session on